Jesus always provides abundantly...
We’ve thought over the past few
weeks about how Christmas is over for many people... It’s as if the incredible
build up was leading to something that was a one off occasion and is now over,
but Christmas in reality is never over – it is a wonderful reminder of the
grace and love of God as Jesus came into the world. In ‘A Christmas Carol’ the
transformed Scrooge says, ‘I will honour Christmas in my heart and try to keep
it all the year…’ Like Scrooge, I think Christmas is something we need to live
out throughout the year…
If Christmas is the end of things or
only something we do once a year we run the risk of ignoring what followed – of
ignoring Jesus’ ministry and his life – we may ignore his teaching, ignore his
messages, ignore his death and ignore his resurrection… And if we’re ignoring
those things then we’re ignoring the fact that he came to offer a very personal
invitation to each one of us – an invitation to know a greater transformation
than even Scrooge knew in ‘A Christmas Carol.’
And it is with thoughts of
transformation that we heard today of Jesus’ first miracle – the changing of
water into wine at the wedding in Cana (John 2:1-11). Weddings were huge
occasions in Jewish society – they usually took place in an evening but the
partying after went on for about a week.
At this particular wedding though
the unthinkable happened – now I’ve been at a party when the egg sandwiches
have all gone or when the sausage rolls have all been eaten, and it can be
quite disappointing, but in these weddings running out of wine was a not just a
disappointment but a matter of huge shame – it meant the hosts could not
provide for the guests. The party was ruined – people would go home
disappointed, angry and probably saying all kinds of things behind the backs of
those who organized the wedding.
And so Jesus was called to the
rescue by Mary – she knew he could do something, and he did. The water used for
cleaning hands was transformed into wine… He also made it clear that what he
was doing was nothing compared to what was to follow – Some have suggested that
he was almost rude to Mary in his reply as he said, when told about the wine
problem, ‘Woman, what is that to you and me ? My time has not yet come...’ But there is no rudeness. He is merely saying
that his time will come at the Crucifixion and the resurrection. That is when
all the world changed forever…
This morning I want to think of 3
things to note about this incredible event. The first is that Jesus was at the
party. Sadly there are still a lot of people that don’t associate being a
Christian with having fun. Some people are still surprised that it’s ok to
smile in church. Some would be surprised if they came along to a social event,
but it is ok for Christians to be happy in Church or anywhere else !
And it’s important to live our lives
as if we’re happy. It doesn’t mean we walk around with a strange grin on our
faces all the time – sometimes life doesn’t make us smile, but knowing Jesus we
can know his peace and know his presence and know that he wants the best for us
– and know that he wants us to be enjoying life. Our smiling, our enjoyment of
life is something that acts to show others something of Jesus.
As he was invited to the party at
Cana, let’s remember that we are called to be people of celebration, people of
good news, people of care, people of hope and people of love…
The second thing is to recognise
that Jesus did transform the water into wine. We sometimes read these things
and take them for granted, but let’s just recognise the incredible power of
that act. He saved the party, and he didn’t do it grudgingly or ask who was to
blame about the wine running out in the first place – he did it with grace and
he did it well as we might expect.
And this transformation was more
powerful than just the physical act of turning water into wine – the stone
water jars were filled for a reason. The Jewish rites of purification meant
people had to wash their hands as eating without washing their hands was seen
as an act of defilement. The hands may have been perfectly clean to start but
it made no difference – this was part of the law.
In this one action though as Jesus
turned the water of purification into wine, he was saying the old had gone and there
was something new. The water which washed hands that may already have been
clean was no real use – the wine, the incredibly fine wine, would transform
things completely.
And in what Jesus did here we are
reminded that it is only by trusting in him that we can really know this
transformation in our lives. We can read books, we can listen to sermons, we can
attend church – and all these things are important – but it is only by trusting
Jesus completely that we will ever really know his transformation in our lives…
So in this action of Jesus turning
the water into incredibly fine wine we are reminded that we have an invitation
to know the transformation of our lives by trusting in the one who transforms…
And then there’s a third point of
this gospel reading and that is to recognise the occasion. Weddings are
wonderful occasions and I don’t think it was any coincidence that it was at a
wedding that Jesus performed his first miracle, because it was a declaration of
so much more. It was the invitation to recognise that he can transform us but
it was also a statement of how the world was changing.
Later the calendars of the world
would change to recognise the presence of Jesus but in this event at Cana Jesus
was declaring that the old had passed and there was a new way which would
become clearer as people knew Jesus. And the culmination of this is written about
in the reading from Revelation that we heard (Rev.19:6-10) as we are told the
marriage of the Lamb has come and his bride is ready. The Lamb is God and the
bride is his Church – Christian people gathered from every corner of the earth
to God to enjoy his eternal feast…
I started as I thought about
Christmas as a beginning of something, and I’ve thought about accepting the
invitation of Jesus as a beginning of a new transformed life, and I’ve thought
of the image of the wedding – something new, the start of something special…
It is into that sort of close
relationship we are invited – a relationship based on love and trust and
acceptance, a relationship of knowing someone is there for us always… That is
God who loves us as we are, who accepts us whatever we’ve done or been, who
trusts us to be his disciples and his witnesses and who absolutely never leaves
us in any situation…
And so to finish I’ll return to Cana
– Jesus was at a wedding and he provided abundantly for everyone. Jesus still
provides abundantly… He didn’t just provide enough to get by – he provided more
than enough, and he didn’t just provide a reasonable substitute for what was
gone – he provided something better – he provided the best wine of all…
We’re invited into a relationship
where we can trust Jesus to provide for us abundantly always, even in the
toughest times, and we can know that when he provides for us – he always
provides the best… AMEN
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